IMDb RATING
6.7/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
A young girl flees her hometown and arrives in the Australian Alps, where new experiences help her learn the differences between sex and love.A young girl flees her hometown and arrives in the Australian Alps, where new experiences help her learn the differences between sex and love.A young girl flees her hometown and arrives in the Australian Alps, where new experiences help her learn the differences between sex and love.
- Awards
- 41 wins & 15 nominations total
Anne-Louise Lambert
- Martha
- (as Anne Louise Lambert)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Somersault underlines a girl's desire of not wanting to be alone. The main character, Heidi, may appear to be flirtatious toward guys; yet what she wants is really to have a company. I guess her characteristics are derived from her mother, Nicole. Thus this is one interesting point of view to look at: about the parallelism of stories between the mother and the daughter. From the short appearance of Nicole, I believe she has her own story of not wanting to be alone. Else, where would Heidi come from? In terms of storyline, I see the simple third act form; beginning, middle, end. Heidi has a journey, and after all the troubles, she manages to resolve with her problems. Heidi's diary might help the audience to know Heidi's back-story. I like how clever the dialog between Heidi and her 'boyfriend' is constructed. In terms of technicalities, the use of landscape and natural elements helps the audience to engage with the story. The snow, the "tears" caused by using hot water to crack the snow on the car's windscreen, the red color
(I am not going to spoil the film here =) ). The mood of the film is very blue from the very beginning; we even see a blue laundry basket! When the resolution is made, though, the light brightens
very nice indeed. "It's good that we met", Somersault.
I saw this film this weekend at a film festival in Austin, Texas, without having heard anything about it ahead of time, and without reading any reviews. I suspect that going in to the theater without any expectations made it more enjoyable to watch.
The cinematography was excellent, and the acting was quite strong. The script was a bit weak, but did not get in the way of the film being engaging and interesting. The story is a bit ethereal at times, by design I think, and flows gradually as the scenes change.
I'd recommend it, especially for anyone who is comfortable with unconventional scripts.
The cinematography was excellent, and the acting was quite strong. The script was a bit weak, but did not get in the way of the film being engaging and interesting. The story is a bit ethereal at times, by design I think, and flows gradually as the scenes change.
I'd recommend it, especially for anyone who is comfortable with unconventional scripts.
I admit that I'm a film coward-domestic and personal interaction can put me on the edge and yesterday afternoon I was on the edge for the entire length of this movie. That is not to say that the film was in any way poorly made or grade B-it was just the opposite. Somersault was a brilliantly crafted, directed and acted film and it deserves a huge audience around the world. It is nothing a Hollywood film is: no physical violence [but much mental violence and disorder], no crime, no lame sappy ending, no laboratory special effects-in short a real film about real people living real lives.
The GenXers do it differently than my generation did but that is to be expected-I just found Cate Shortland's look into their lives a little edgy for someone further down the age track like me. I admired greatly the acting as well as the cinematography of the film; the direction was superb as Ms. Shortland spliced together the fragmentation of the lives of the principle characters. Those lives were highly disjointed but that is probably a generational comment because the people portrayed seemed less upset about their situations than I felt about them.
The film deserves all the accolades it is receiving-make every effort to see it.
The GenXers do it differently than my generation did but that is to be expected-I just found Cate Shortland's look into their lives a little edgy for someone further down the age track like me. I admired greatly the acting as well as the cinematography of the film; the direction was superb as Ms. Shortland spliced together the fragmentation of the lives of the principle characters. Those lives were highly disjointed but that is probably a generational comment because the people portrayed seemed less upset about their situations than I felt about them.
The film deserves all the accolades it is receiving-make every effort to see it.
A beautifully filmed story, the two film comparisons that come to mind are The Virgin Suicides and Morvern Callar. All of these films feature young girls, coping with circumstances that throw them into a spiral - an internal spiral - filmed with grace, attention to detail and a good ear for the soundtrack. There are difficult moments here, where I found myself saying 'Don't do it, don't do it', but she does because inexperience and lack of confidence make for poor choices. As soon as you can place yourself in her shoes, you will find this film moving, and very clearly (and poetically) observed. I recommend this film very highly, both for its clean and original voice - and very Australian voice - and the sympathy we feel for its very real lead characters.
So often, Australian films that make it to America are set either in a large city (usually Sydney), the outback (think "Crocodile Dundee " -- if you must) or the deep interior, a la "Rabbit Proof Fence" -- which films always seem to manage to work Ayers Rock in. It comes as a mild surprise, then, to see the bulk of this film set in an alpine-type ski resort burg. The lead performances, by Sam Worthington and especially by Abbie Cornish (here playing, according to the write-up, 16 years old, although I don't remember an exact age being mentioned in the film; I suspect in real life Ms. Cornish may be older than that, but she plays the age most convincingly in any case) are absolutely top-notch; Ms. Cornish's might be said to be award-worthy. The story unfolds at a leisurely pace, and yet there is an underlying tension within the story that works perfectly. Of the mere four films I had the time and money to see at this year's Toronto Film Festival, this was my hands-down favorite.
Did you know
- TriviaTook 7 years to make.
- GoofsWhen Joe pours hot water onto the icy windscreen of his car, no steam appears.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Inside the Snowdome: Making 'Somersault' (2005)
- SoundtracksOnce Again
Written by Matt Walker
Performed by Matt Walker & The Necessary Few
Sony/ATV Music Publishing Australia
Licensed courtesy of Spaghetti Records
- How long is Somersault?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Tepetaklak
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $92,214
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $21,566
- Apr 23, 2006
- Gross worldwide
- $1,482,493
- Runtime
- 1h 46m(106 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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